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Monday, April 7, 2025

Brazil’s Lula to reclaim presidency after beating Bolsonaro 

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888 days ago
20221031

Brazil­ians de­liv­ered a very tight vic­to­ry to Luiz In­á­cio Lu­la da Sil­va in a bit­ter pres­i­den­tial elec­tion, giv­ing the left­ist for­mer pres­i­dent an­oth­er shot at pow­er in a re­jec­tion of in­cum­bent Jair Bol­sonaro’s far-right pol­i­tics.

Da Sil­va re­ceived 50.9% of the vote and Bol­sonaro 49.1%, ac­cord­ing to the coun­try’s elec­tion au­thor­i­ty. Yet hours af­ter the re­sults were in -- and con­grat­u­la­tions poured in from world lead­ers—Bol­sonaro had yet to pub­licly con­cede or re­act in any way.

Bol­sonaro’s cam­paign had made re­peat­ed — un­proven — claims of pos­si­ble elec­toral ma­nip­u­la­tion be­fore the vote, rais­ing fears that, if he lost, he would not ac­cept de­feat and try to chal­lenge the re­sults.

For da Sil­va, the high-stakes elec­tion was a stun­ning come­back. His im­pris­on­ment for cor­rup­tion side-lined him from the 2018 elec­tion won by Bol­sonaro, who has used the pres­i­den­cy to pro­mote con­ser­v­a­tive so­cial val­ues while al­so de­liv­er­ing in­cen­di­ary speech­es and test­ing de­mo­c­ra­t­ic in­sti­tu­tions.

“To­day the on­ly win­ner is the Brazil­ian peo­ple,” da Sil­va said in a speech Sun­day evening at a ho­tel in down­town Sao Paulo. “It’s the vic­to­ry of a de­mo­c­ra­t­ic move­ment that formed above po­lit­i­cal par­ties, per­son­al in­ter­ests and ide­olo­gies so that democ­ra­cy came out vic­to­ri­ous.”

Da Sil­va is promis­ing to gov­ern be­yond his par­ty. He says he wants to bring in cen­trists and even some lean­ing to the right, and to re­store the kind of pros­per­i­ty the coun­try en­joyed when he last served as pres­i­dent from 2003-2010. Yet he faces head­winds in a po­lit­i­cal­ly po­lar­ized so­ci­ety.

Bol­sonaro’s four years in of­fice have been marked by pro­claimed con­ser­vatism and de­fense of tra­di­tion­al Chris­t­ian val­ues. He claimed that his ri­val’s re­turn to pow­er would ush­er in com­mu­nism, le­gal­ized drugs, abor­tion and the per­se­cu­tion of church­es - things that didn’t hap­pen dur­ing da Sil­va’s ear­li­er eight years in of­fice.

This was the coun­try’s tight­est elec­tion since its re­turn to democ­ra­cy in 1985, and the first time that a sit­ting pres­i­dent failed to win re-elec­tion. Just over 2 mil­lion votes sep­a­rat­ed the two can­di­dates; the pre­vi­ous clos­est race, in 2014, was de­cid­ed by a mar­gin of rough­ly 3.5 mil­lion votes.

Da Sil­va’s win ex­tend­ed a wave of re­cent left­ist tri­umphs across the re­gion, in­clud­ing Chile, Colom­bia and Ar­genti­na.

The pres­i­dent-elect will in­her­it a na­tion strain­ing against it­self af­ter he is in­au­gu­rat­ed on Jan. 1, said Thomas Trau­mann, an in­de­pen­dent po­lit­i­cal an­a­lyst who com­pared Sun­day’s re­sults to Biden’s 2020 vic­to­ry.

“The huge chal­lenge that Lu­la has will be to paci­fy the coun­try,” he said. “Peo­ple are not on­ly po­lar­ized on po­lit­i­cal mat­ters, but al­so have dif­fer­ent val­ues, iden­ti­ty and opin­ions. What’s more, they don’t care what the oth­er side’s val­ues, iden­ti­ties and opin­ions are.”

Among world lead­ers of­fer­ing con­grat­u­la­tions on Sun­day night was U.S. Pres­i­dent Joe Biden, who in a state­ment high­light­ed the coun­try’s “free, fair, and cred­i­ble elec­tions.” The Eu­ro­pean Union al­so com­mend­ed the elec­toral au­thor­i­ty for its ef­fec­tive­ness and trans­paren­cy through­out the cam­paign.

Bol­sonaro had been lead­ing through­out the first half of the count and, as soon as da Sil­va over­took him, cars in the streets of down­town Sao Paulo be­gan honk­ing their horns. Peo­ple in the streets of Rio de Janeiro’s Ipane­ma neigh­bour­hood could be heard shout­ing, “It turned!”

Da Sil­va’s head­quar­ters in down­town Sao Paulo ho­tel on­ly erupt­ed once the fi­nal re­sult was an­nounced, un­der­scor­ing the ten­sion that was a hall­mark of this race.

“Four years wait­ing for this,” said Gabriela Souto, one of the few sup­port­ers al­lowed in due to heavy se­cu­ri­ty.

Out­side Bol­sonaro’s home in Rio, ground-ze­ro for his sup­port base, a woman atop a truck de­liv­ered a prayer over a speak­er, then sang ex­cit­ed­ly, try­ing to gen­er­ate some en­er­gy as the tal­ly grew for da Sil­va. But sup­port­ers decked out in the green and yel­low of the flag bare­ly re­spond­ed. Many perked up when the na­tion­al an­them played, singing along loud­ly with hands over their hearts.

For months, it ap­peared that da Sil­va was head­ed for easy vic­to­ry as he kin­dled nos­tal­gia for his pres­i­den­cy, when Brazil’s econ­o­my was boom­ing.

Bol­sonaro’s ad­min­is­tra­tion has been wide­ly crit­i­cized for its han­dling of the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic and the worst de­for­esta­tion in the Ama­zon rain­for­est in 15 years. But he has built a de­vot­ed base by pre­sent­ing him­self as pro­tec­tion from left­ist poli­cies that he says in­fringe on per­son­al lib­er­ties while pro­duc­ing eco­nom­ic tur­moil and moral rot. He sought to shore up sup­port in an elec­tion year with vast gov­ern­ment spend­ing.

“We did not face an op­po­nent, a can­di­date. We faced the ma­chine of the Brazil­ian state put at his ser­vice so we could not win the elec­tion,” da Sil­va told the crowd in Sao Paulo.

Da Sil­va built an ex­ten­sive so­cial wel­fare pro­gram dur­ing his tenure at pres­i­dent that helped lift tens of mil­lions in­to the mid­dle class. The man uni­ver­sal­ly known as Lu­la left of­fice with an ap­proval rat­ing above 80%, prompt­ing then U.S. Pres­i­dent Barack Oba­ma to call him “the most pop­u­lar politi­cian on Earth.”

But he is al­so re­mem­bered for his ad­min­is­tra­tion’s in­volve­ment in vast cor­rup­tion re­vealed by sprawl­ing in­ves­ti­ga­tions.

Da Sil­va was jailed for 580 days for cor­rup­tion and mon­ey laun­der­ing. His con­vic­tions were lat­er an­nulled by Brazil’s top court, which ruled the pre­sid­ing judge had been bi­ased and col­lud­ed with pros­e­cu­tors. That en­abled da Sil­va to run for pres­i­dent for the sixth time.

Da Sil­va has pledged to boost spend­ing on the poor, re-es­tab­lish re­la­tion­ships with for­eign gov­ern­ments and take bold ac­tion to elim­i­nate il­le­gal clear-cut­ting in the Ama­zon rain­for­est.

“We will once again mon­i­tor and do sur­veil­lance in the Ama­zon. We will fight every il­le­gal ac­tiv­i­ty,” da Sil­va said in his speech. “At the same time, we will pro­mote sus­tain­able de­vel­op­ment of com­mu­ni­ties in the Ama­zon.”

The pres­i­dent-elect has pledged to in­stall a min­istry for Brazil’s orig­i­nal peo­ples, which will be run by an In­dige­nous per­son.

But as da Sil­va tries to achieve these and oth­er goals, he will be con­front­ed by strong op­po­si­tion from con­ser­v­a­tive law­mak­ers.

Un­em­ploy­ment this year has fall­en to its low­est lev­el since 2015 and, al­though over­all in­fla­tion slowed dur­ing the cam­paign, food prices are in­creas­ing at a dou­ble-dig­it rate. Bol­sonaro’s wel­fare pay­ments helped many Brazil­ians get by, but da Sil­va has been pre­sent­ing him­self as the can­di­date more will­ing to sus­tain aid go­ing for­ward and raise the min­i­mum wage.

In April, he tapped cen­tre-right Ger­al­do Al­ck­min, a for­mer ri­val, to be his run­ning mate. It was an­oth­er key part of an ef­fort to cre­ate a broad, pro-democ­ra­cy front to not just un­seat Bol­sonaro, but to make it eas­i­er to gov­ern.

Build­ing bridges among a di­verse — and di­vid­ed — coun­try will be key to his suc­cess, said Car­los Me­lo, a po­lit­i­cal sci­ence pro­fes­sor at In­sper Uni­ver­si­ty in Sao Paulo.

“If Lu­la man­ages to talk to vot­ers who didn’t vote for him, which Bol­sonaro nev­er tried, and seeks ne­go­ti­at­ed so­lu­tions to the eco­nom­ic, so­cial and po­lit­i­cal cri­sis we have,” Me­lo said, “then he could re­con­nect Brazil to a time in which peo­ple could dis­agree and still get some things done.”

___

Sto­ry by MAURI­CIO SAVERESE and DI­ANE JEAN­TET of The As­so­ci­at­ed Press.  AP writer Car­la Bri­di con­tributed from Brasil­ia.

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